KLRU is a presenting partners in the second annual PBS Online Film Festival. The festival showcases 25 short films that feature a diversity of subjects, voices and viewpoints, accessible via all PBS digital platforms, YouTube and PBS social media channels.

“PBS is committed to providing access to the best in independent filmmaking, in short and long form, online and on-air. The Online Film Festival is a great example of how PBS can leverage the web’s reach to showcase the terrific work of our producing partners, including PBS member stations,” said Jason Seiken, PBS SVP and General Manager, Digital. “We see the Online Film Festival as another example of how PBS and our partners are innovating and experimenting with different formats and platforms to deliver great content.”

Films contributed to this year’s festival by KLRU are:

“Noc na Tanecku (Night at the Dance)”
See a profile of the last days of a Czech dance hall in rural Texas — and the old-timers who go there to polka. Watch and vote at pbs.org/filmfestivalAbout the Filmmaker: Annie Silverstein is an Austin based filmmaker and media educator. She directed the feature documentary March Point (Independent Lens 2008), in collaboration with three teenagers from the Swinomish Tribe and is Co-Founder of Longhouse Media, an indigenous media arts & education organization based in Seattle, WA. Annie has worked internationally as a Producer, Director, Cinematographer, and Editor on films ranging in theme from land access issues in Ethiopia to the experiences of LGBTI refugees living in South Africa. Most recently she produced/directed Noc na Tanečku (Night at the Dance), which screened at festivals internationally, and wrote/directed her first fiction film Spark, which screened at Slamdance and SXSW, where it won a Jury Award for Best Texas Short (2012). Annie is currently earning her MFA at University of Texas-Austin.

“Mijo”
This is an evocative portrayal of a mother and child’s intimate relationship in the midst of life-altering medical events. Watch and vote at pbs.org/filmfestivalAbout the Filmmaker: Chithra Jeyaram is an emerging documentary filmmaker and educator with an MFA in Film Production from University of Texas at Austin. Her first exposure to filmmaking began in 2004 with a failed attempt to fund a film about an explosive water-sharing dispute between two southern states in India. Deeply affected by that experience, she quit a decade-long career as Physical Therapist and enrolled in film school.

“The Longest Sun”
A narrative short film inspired by the mythology of the Tewa peoples of northern New Mexico is told entirely in the endangered language of Tewa (less than 500 native speakers remain). The film follows a young Tewa boy who sets out on a mythical journey to stop the sun from setting. Watch and vote at pbs.org/filmfestivalAbout the Filmmaker: Patrick William Smith (MFA in Film Production, UT Austin) works as a director and cinematographer between Austin, TX and Seattle, WA. He has directed a number of award-winning fiction and nonfiction films, web-series, and commercials. His documentary, Shades of The Border, toured at over two dozen film festivals worldwide (including SXSW, Media That Matters), garnering a number of awards and DVD distribution. Patrick went on to direct a reality web-series for internet mogul, Penny Arcade, and later developed a comedy web-series funded through a successful, front-page crowdsourcing campaign on Kickstarter (Kris and Scott’s, Scott and Kris Show), which drew national media attention. Patrick’s most recent endeavor, a narrative quest film told entirely in the endangered Tewa language, is currently touring festivals worldwide. Looking ahead, Patrick has begun development on his first feature.

Viewers will have the opportunity to vote for their favorite short film through March 22; the film with the most votes will receive the People’s Choice Award.

The featured films were produced by a number public media partners, including Independent Television Service (ITVS), POV, Center for Asian American Media (CAAM), Latino Public Broadcasting (LPB), Vision Maker Media, National Black Programming Consortium (NPBC) and Pacific Islanders in Communications (PIC). This year’s festival also includes films from PBS stations KCTS 9 (Seattle), KLRU (Austin), PBS SoCaL (Los Angeles), WGTE (Toledo) and WCVE (Richmond, Virginia).

Other short films featured in the PBS Online Film Festival include:

Independent Television Service (ITVS)
“Brionna Williams”
Meet Brionna Williams: At 14, she was suffering from health problems and chronic asthma. Now a 17-year-old senior at Kansas City’s Central High School, Brionna has become healthier and has found focus as a highly recruited student athlete.

“Can’t Hold Me Back”
The film follows Fernando Parraz as he becomes the first in his family to earn a high school diploma — his ticket out of the struggles of inner-city poverty and violence. With a mountain of roadblocks stacked against his educational achievement, Fernando finds support from an unlikely figure: his father — a former gangster who has suffered the costs of his own mistakes.

“Story of an Egg”
Can learning the meaning of a single term actually help change the food system? David Evans and Alexis Koefoed think so. These poultry farmers explain the real story behind such terms as “cage free,” “free range” and “pasture raised” so that consumers can make informed decisions when they go to their local supermarket.

POV
“Ars Magna”
Nominated for a News and Documentary Emmy® Award, “Ars Magna” enters into the obsessive and fascinating world of anagrams with a man who took the first three lines of Hamlet’s “To Be or Not to Be” and created what has been called “the world’s greatest anagram.”

“CatCam”
An engineer straps a camera on a stray cat in North Carolina and inadvertently creates a media sensation.

“Sound of Vision”
A blind musician spends his waking hours confronting the hurdles and embracing the cacophony of “The City That Never Sleeps” — New York — which he will never see.

Center for Asian American Media (CAAM)
“Verses in Exile: Why I Write”
Vehement Khmer-American spoken word artist Kosal Khiev delivers a passionate personal narrative in this engaging, head-on collision between the political and personal.

“Indian Summer”
This short documentary brings together first-generation Indian-American youth with similar feelings of alienation to document their religious and cultural point of view.

POV and Latino Public Broadcasting (LPB)
“Sin País” (Without Country)
Winner of a 2012 Student Academy Award®, “Sin País” explores a family’s experience as members are separated by deportation.

Vision Maker Media
“Hoverboard”
After watching Back to the Future 2, an imaginative young girl and her stuffed teddy bear try to invent a real working hoverboard.

Vision Maker Media and ITVS
“Injunuity: Buried”
“Injunuity” is a unique mix of animation, music and real thoughts from real people exploring our world from the Native-American perspective. “Injunity: Buried” shares Oblone activist and educator Corinna Gould’s reflection on the destruction of sacred shell mounds in the San Francisco Bay Area of California.

National Black Programming Consortium (NBPC)
“Asylum – Bisi”
Bisi Alimi describes coming out as a gay man — on national television — in Nigeria.

“Asylum – Skye”
Skye Tenevimbo stood up to Robert Mugabe, and her actions brought unwanted attention to her family back in Zimbabwe.

Pacific Islanders in Communication (PIC)
“Lina’la’ Lusong”
Unshaken by centuries of colonial conquest and the changing tides of occupation, the lusong has endured to heal and feed the people of the land, and to impart a sacred lesson of survival.

KCTS 9 (Seattle)
“Capsule”
Two astronauts struggle to stay alive as their crashed space capsule slowly runs out of oxygen.

“Honor the Treaties”
A portrait of photographer Aaron Huey’s work on the Pine Ridge Reservation features Shepard Fairey.

“The House I Keep”
In this short film, observe a young woman’s emotional struggle to come to terms with her miscarriage.

PBS SoCaL (Los Angeles)
“Breathe Life”
The Montelone family must fight cystic fibrosis every day, but their passion for love, life and surfing allows them to get through the uncertainty.

“Still”
Dive into the world of Carlos Eyles, ocean photographer, to discover the powerful connection between humankind and the seas that surround us.

“Worlds Apart”
A young Native-American woman copes with the struggles of college away from her reservation.

WCVE (Richmond, Virginia)
“Live Art”
View a groundbreaking educational program and concert event, created and led by the School of the Performing Arts in Richmond, Virginia.

WGTE (Toledo)
“Heel”
From the theater stage to the wrestling mat, this is the surprising story of a young woman’s journey to be a wrestler.